The Red Skull in unrelenting in his attack, and not even Earth’s mightiest heroes can withstand the telepathic commands of the lifeless brain of Professor Charles Xavier. In a moment of despair, Havoc remembers his past, the moment in which his mother dies and also the moment in which he’s separated from his brother (AKA Cyclops).

With the Odinson under his control, the Red Skull has nothing to fear. And so he slowly tries to break down Captain America’s mind, by showing him that he stands for a doomed nation. Instead of the nostalgic American Dream of the past, the reality is a complete nightmare.

There is a moment here in which Rick Remender portrays the Red Skull as the voice of reason. After all, what is the United States of America nowadays? Is it the land of freedom and opportunity that it once was? Or, as the villains puts it, a country inhabited by “an uneducated population fixated on competition, material wealth and voyeurism. Violent monsters doused in antibiotics to offset their diet of sugary sweet drink and mounds of carcinogenic cow flesh”. Certainly, ignorance, obesity and consumerism seem to be the new colors of the American flag, but very rarely do we get to see the nemesis of a superhero talking so lucidly and accurately.

The Summers brothers / los hermanos Summers

There is however one thing that Red Skull forgets. The reality rarely resembles the dream, but that doesn’t mean the dream isn’t worth fighting for. Steve Rogers is the embodiment of an ideal, and ideals never die. This is why despite all the power wielded by the Nazi, Captain America soldiers on.

Perhaps as a way of saying goodbye John Cassaday includes many wonderful tributes in this fourth issue, which also happens to be his last. Maybe my favorite is the one that shows Havoc and Scarlet Witch being hunted down by Nazi Sentinels, this is a great homage to John Byrne’s legendary “Days of Future Past” cover, a cover so famous that has been re-elaborated and reimagined dozens of times by some of the most popular Marvel artists.

The image of a ruined America, overrun by drugs and delinquency fiercely contrasts with that of the Norman Rockwell picture of happiness and decency that should be Steve Rogers ideal. And of course, the panel of obese people buying things in the neighborhood mall is priceless. The shocking final page shows the brainless corpse of Charles Xavier and behind him a Red Skull that has turned into Onslaught.

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About the Author - Arion

Arion, who is either from Chile or New York (it’s not really clear) writes a blog that the Outhouse steals on a regular basis. Arion is by far the nicest of all the staff writers and the most well behaved only having been banned from one country. One thing we really appreciate about Aroin is that he writes his reviews in English and Spanish and we hope someday he’ll translate this blurb for us. We’re not so good at languages, just look at how well we write in English if you need proof. You should bookmark Arion’s blog - http://artbyarion.blogspot.com – and actually look at it. There will be a quiz at the end of every month.